The details have changed slightly since we last wrote about this, but the idea is exactly the same.

Here’s one variant, reproduced in full:

Better safe than sorry right. Channel 13 news was just talking about this change in Facebook's privacy policy. Better safe than sorry. As of January 3rd, 2015 at 11:43am Eastern standard time; I do NOT give Facebook or any entitles associated with Facebook permission to use my pictures, information, or post, both from the past, in the present, or in the future. By this statement I give notice to Facebook it is strictly forbidden to disclose, copy, distribute or take any other action against me based on this profile is private and confidential information. The violation of privacy can be punished by law (UCC 1-308-11 308-103 and Rome statute). NOTE: Facebook is now a public entity. All members must post a note like this. If you prefer, you can copy and paste this version if you do not publish the statement at least once it will be tactically allowing the use of your photos, as well as information contained in the profile status updates. DO NOT SHARE you MUST copy and paste this. I will leave a comment so it will be easier to copy and paste!!!

At least some people on Facebook are blindly following orders by copying, pasting and posting it to their own Facebook walls, and thereby perpetrating the hoax.

Why you need to remove this posting

If you posted this, PLEASE REMOVE THE POSTING NOW.

Let me be quite blunt.

If you post this sort of thing where other people can see it without also explaining why it is arrant garbage, you are:

Misleading your friends and family.

Demeaning yourself.

Teaching others that it is OK to click without thinking.

It is never acceptable to click without thinking.

That is exactly the way the crooks hope you’ll behave: sooner or later, you’ll end up where you shouldn’t be and put yourself at risk.

Ideally, at least if you are a fluent speaker of English, you’d dismiss the message above simply because it is at the very borderline of illiteracy and incomprehensibility.

But even if you do labour through its tortured prose, you can’t help noticing its self-contradictory absurdity, because it boils down to this:

Dear Facebook. I hereby forbid you to act on any of the information I have ever posted here, including this statement forbidding you to act on any of the information I have ever posted here.

So, if Facebook accepts your statement, it cannot accept it; and if Facebook does not accept it, then it cannot accept it.

Therefore the statement is redundant. (Joseph Heller would have been proud.)

Sadly, this is no laughing matter.

The idea that you can best control the privacy of your personal information by quoting bogus legal statutes is a dangerous one.

Spouting absurd and unforceable legal contradictions won’t help you control anything.

You best control the privacy of your personal information by following the simple principle, “If in doubt, don’t give it out.”

The silver lining

There is a silver lining here.

As a Naked Security reader said in an email:

Maybe users are wising up to Facebook hoaxes? Because I only noticed one person putting this notice up but I noticed quite a few people making fun of it.

Like this, for example:

We’re not sure whether we should openly encourage parody of this sort, because it is a little bit rude to those who might have posted the hoax with the best of intentions.

On the other hand, if you have posted such obviously nonsensical garbage, what sort of impression do you think you have given of yourself?

The bottom line

Posting made-up legal bogosities isn’t going to make you safer online, and it isn’t going to help you learn to be safer, either.

If you want to enjoy services like Facebook and other social media websites without putting yourself at risk, why not use some of our free resources?

Is it perhaps also indicative of a certain type of social media mindset? The idea that things can be changed by clicking rather than doing. What FB does with our data is like something from a dystopian science fiction novel yet people continue to use it. Alternatives are available.

But the fact that a lot of people do not want Facebook to use their personal info says enough right? Why are we as users being categorized by the big data? I think we should learn from Germany where the law made sure Facebook had to change policy to make sure the privacy rights of the German people would not come in danger.

Thing is, this hoax has nothing – nothing at all – to do with privacy and the law. It merely pretends to have a privacy angle in order to trick people into pointless behaviour that gives a false sense of security.

All the law in Germany isn’t going to stop you giving away data you didn’t mean to if you are willing to rely on magic incantations like this one to “protect” your privacy.

Paul should go to work for the FBI and solve the hacking issue. The post was a concern about there privacy. Not a lecture on computer use and the safety in using them. Cut the lady some slack, at least she had some concerns about the issue of everyone’s right to secure computer use.

In order to do its job, Facebook must disclose, copy and distribute the text and photos you post: that is the whole reason you upload them to Facebook in the first place. If you don’t want to share them, then don’t post them on Facebook.

There’s no shame in checking it out. It’s what everyone should do: verify before sharing. Once in a blue moon I look up something going around that sounds fishy and am surprised to find it’s actually true. 🙂

I posted it but i thought about it first. I didnt find it demeaning to myself not to remove it as this article suggests that i should. Of all the hoaxes or mistruths going around the internet i think this has to be one of the most useful as it reminded me not to put everything online. While facebook might not share our info, our fb friends can.